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Norway

1. If you come from a country outside the EU/EEA and wish to work in Norway, you
need a residence permit. If you do not already have a residence permit, you must
apply for a residence permit for work. Previously this was called a work permit. This
may for example be a residence permit for skilled workers, ethnic cooks, seasonal
workers, self-employed persons or employees in a humanitarian, non-profit or
religious organisation. 

2. Doest not offer grants


3. Voluntary organisations registered in the Register of Norwegian NGOs may be
entitled to participate in various grant schemes for voluntary enterprises, including the
grassroots share. Registering in the Central Coordinating Register for Legal Entities
and the Register of Norwegian NGOs is free.

Institutions, organisations, societies, associations, foundations, etc. that do not have a


commercial purpose are exempt from income and wealth tax.

If the organisation’s income is primarily membership fees, donations, collections and/or


voluntary efforts, this will count in favour of the organisation being considered tax-exempt. 

The following types of income are tax-free for tax-exempt organisations


 Membership fees
 Entry fees
 Gym membership fees
 Ticket revenue from events
 State subsidies
 Outright donations and grants
 Income from members’ meetings (club evenings, meetings, functions)  
 Income from individual, temporary activities and arrangements, such as garage sales
 Sales of supporters’ clothing and equipmen

Organisations that do not have national scope (beneficial for Norway) may be comprised by
the gift/donation deduction scheme by joining a central organisation that's considered to have
national scope. The activity need not cover all counties. The number of members and their
geographic locations will provide an indication of the organisation’s activities and
distribution.
Yes, it is possible to recieve financial support.
4. Yes
5. NO
6. I could not find.

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